C
Cronstedt31
My company has always had a records retention policy that is simply ignored
by the vast majority of employees. With a few exceptions, the retention
period for general business correspondence including email, is three years. I
frequently refer back to emails that are more than three years old to help
with new issues or to continue work on projects that are more than three
years old so I don't want to delete all my emails that are out of the records
retention guidelines. In the past, this was no problem, since to keep my old
emails around, all I had to do was ignore the guidelines and not delete
anything.
The company has thousands of Lenovo T60 laptop computers that are all
identical and run Outlook 2003 (11.8118.8132) SP2. They have modified these
computers to include lots of company specific background software that forces
certain bureacratic things to happen such as document labeling guidelines,
security updates, document backups. Some of these are good things but, from
my point of view, many are bad. Now, the insidious records retention
department is implementing a new tool that will automatically search our
Microsoft Outlook .pst files and delete all messages that were created/sent
more than three years ago.
As you likely know, email messages are not stored as individual files as are
other microsoft Office documents. Rather, all the email in any given Outlook
data file is stored in a single (often HUGE) .pst file. Clearly, our records
retention "police" have some kind of software tool that examines the .pst
file(s) and deletes any emails inside the .pst file that were created or sent
more than three years ago. This will be implemented in the next month or so.
I hate this and want to prevent it from happening to my email.
So what I was wondering is whether any of you know of a software tool
(preferably free, shareware, or with a free trial period) that will change
the various dates of all the individual emails inside a given .pst file?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Barring the existance of such a program, do you have any other good ideas
for how to circumvent this new attack on my needed emails?
Regards,
Cronstedt31
by the vast majority of employees. With a few exceptions, the retention
period for general business correspondence including email, is three years. I
frequently refer back to emails that are more than three years old to help
with new issues or to continue work on projects that are more than three
years old so I don't want to delete all my emails that are out of the records
retention guidelines. In the past, this was no problem, since to keep my old
emails around, all I had to do was ignore the guidelines and not delete
anything.
The company has thousands of Lenovo T60 laptop computers that are all
identical and run Outlook 2003 (11.8118.8132) SP2. They have modified these
computers to include lots of company specific background software that forces
certain bureacratic things to happen such as document labeling guidelines,
security updates, document backups. Some of these are good things but, from
my point of view, many are bad. Now, the insidious records retention
department is implementing a new tool that will automatically search our
Microsoft Outlook .pst files and delete all messages that were created/sent
more than three years ago.
As you likely know, email messages are not stored as individual files as are
other microsoft Office documents. Rather, all the email in any given Outlook
data file is stored in a single (often HUGE) .pst file. Clearly, our records
retention "police" have some kind of software tool that examines the .pst
file(s) and deletes any emails inside the .pst file that were created or sent
more than three years ago. This will be implemented in the next month or so.
I hate this and want to prevent it from happening to my email.
So what I was wondering is whether any of you know of a software tool
(preferably free, shareware, or with a free trial period) that will change
the various dates of all the individual emails inside a given .pst file?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Barring the existance of such a program, do you have any other good ideas
for how to circumvent this new attack on my needed emails?
Regards,
Cronstedt31